INDUSTRY: Worst Foot

Sitting in
solemn convention in Manhattan's Hotel Waldorf-Astoria last week was
the "Congress of American Industry," annual session of the National
Association of Manufacturers. If the delegates, some 2,000 strong, were
not all Business, at least they were a big slice of it, representatives
of the employers of one-half of the country's industrial labor.
However, meeting at a time when for the first time in five years the
New Deal had been set back on its heelsby a new depressionthey were
in a new position. For the voice of Business, although far...